The PGA Championship is one of four men's major golf championships and the 2025 edition is set to take place at Quail Hollow, North Carolina in the United States.
Often referred to as the USPGA, it is the second major on the calendar and is played after the US Masters.
Winning a major is the pinnacle of any player's career and once again a world-class field will battle it out over four day for the top prize.
Here is everything you need to know ahead of the 2025 PGA Championship.
The PGA Championship is the second major of the season and is often played in May each year.
In 2025 the PGA Championship will take place from Thursday 15th May until Monday 19th May.
In 2025 the PGA Championship will return to Quail Hollow Golf Club, in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The last time the PGA Championship was played at Quail Hollow was in 2017, when American Justin Thomas won the tournament.
Since then a number of improvements have been made to the course and the players will be in for a serious test.
The course will play as a par 71, over a total distance of 7,626 yards.
Home golfer Xander Schauffele is the reigning PGA Championship champion after taking out the 2024 tournament.
He beat compatriot Bryson DeChambeau by one shot at the Valhalla Golf Club in Kentucky.
Australians viewers will be able to watch the PGA Championship on ESPN and Disney+.
The PGA Championship has a long and proud history and was first played in 1916 at the Siwanoy Country Club in New York.
It was originally a match play tournament, but changed to stroke play in 1958 and has remained that way ever since.
Home golfer Brooks Koepka has enjoyed great success at the PGA Championship in recent years, winning it on three occasions, in 2018, 2019 and 2023.
Before that Tiger Woods won it on four occasions, while Jack Nicklaus has claimed a record five victories since stroke play became the norm in 1958.
Jason Day won the PGA Championship in 2015, becoming the fourth Aussie to do so since 1958, following in the footsteps of David Graham (1979), Wayne Grady (1990) and Steve Elkington (1995).
The total prize pot for the PGA Championship in 2025 stands at a staggering $4million.
The winner will take home a cool $720,000 for their work over the four rounds.
After winning the Masters at Augusta last month, Rory McIlroy will be out to win back-to-back majors at the PGA Championship.
The Northern Irishman is priced at 5.60 to get the job done, the same price as Scottie Scheffler.
DeChambeau can be backed at 12.00, while the reigning champion Schauffele is 23.00 to defend his crown.
Min Woo Lee is the leading Australian hope at 76.00, with Jason Day 81.00 and Cameron Smith 101.00.